Smoking again now, leaning back against the wall, Felix said: And what do they think of Alice?
Eileen looked at him. Who, my parents? she asked. He nodded. Yeah, she said. They’ve met a couple of times. They don’t know each other really well or anything.
With a smile Alice said: They disapprove of me.
Felix laughed. Do they really? he asked.
Eileen was shaking her head. No, she said. They don’t disapprove. They just don’t know you very well.
They never liked us living together in college, Alice went on. They wanted Eileen to make friends with nice middle-class girls.
Eileen let out a breath with a raw kind of laughing sound. To Felix, she said: I think they found Alice’s personality a bit challenging.
And now that I’m successful, they resent me, Alice added.
I don’t know where you get that from, said Eileen.
Well, they didn’t like you visiting me in hospital. Did they?
Eileen was shaking her head again, pulling at her earlobe distractedly. That had nothing to do with you being successful, she said.
What did it have to do with? Alice asked.
Felix seemed to have forgotten he was smoking, and let the joint go out between his fingers. Looking up at him, Eileen said: You see, when Alice moved back from New York, she didn’t tell me she was coming home. I was sending her all these emails and messages, hearing nothing back for weeks, and getting really worried and panicky that something had happened to her. And the whole time she was living five minutes away from my apartment. Pointing at Simon, she went on: He knew. I was the only one who didn’t know. And she told him not to tell me, so he had to put up with me complaining to him that I hadn’t heard from her, and all the time he knew she was living on fucking Clanbrassil Street.
In a restrained voice Alice said: Obviously it wasn’t a great time for me.
Eileen was nodding her head, with the same bright effortful smile. Yeah, she said. Not a great time for me either, because my partner of like three years had just left me, and I had nowhere to live. And my best friend wasn’t speaking to me, and my other best friend was acting really weird because he wasn’t allowed to tell me anything.
Eileen, said Alice calmly, with all due respect, I was having a psychiatric breakdown.
Yes, I know. I remember, because when you were admitted to hospital, I was there pretty much every day.
Alice said nothing.
The reason my parents didn’t like me visiting you so much had nothing to do with you being successful, Eileen went on. They just don’t think you’re a very good friend.
Remember when you got out of hospital, you told me you were leaving Dublin for a few weeks to get some rest? And now it turns out you weren’t leaving for a few weeks, you were leaving forever. Which everyone seemed to realise except me. But no need to keep me in the loop, obviously. I’m just the idiot who put my bank account into overdraft getting buses to see you in hospital every day. See, I suppose my parents would say you just don’t really care about me.
Simon had bowed his head while Eileen was speaking, but Felix went on watching them both. Alice stared across the table, patches of colour flaring on her cheeks.
You have no idea what I’ve been through, Alice said.
Eileen laughed, a high brittle laugh. Couldn’t I say exactly the same thing to you? she asked.
Alice closed her eyes and opened them again. Right, she said. You mean some guy you didn’t even really like broke up with you. Must have been rough.
From the other end of the table, Simon said: Alice.
No, Alice went on. None of you have any idea. Don’t lecture me. Not one of you understands anything about my life.
Eileen got to her feet and let her chair fall backward onto the floor, slamming the kitchen door shut behind her. Simon sat up, watching her go, and Alice glanced over at him impassively. Go on, she said. She needs you, I don’t.
Looking back at her, Simon answered in a gentle tone of voice: But that hasn’t always been true, has it?
Fuck you, said Alice.
He went on looking at her. I know you’re angry, he said. But I think you also know that what you’re saying isn’t right.
You know nothing about me, she answered.
Gazing down at the surface of the table then, he seemed to smile. Okay, he said. He rose to his feet and left the room, closing the door quietly after him. Alice put her fingertips on her temples briefly, as if her head ached, and then she got to her feet and went to the sink, rinsing out her glass. You can’t trust people, she said. Any time you think you can, they just throw it back at you. Simon is the worst of all. You know what’s wrong with him? I’m serious, it’s called a martyr complex. He never needs anything from anyone, and he thinks that makes him a superior being. Whereas in reality he just leads a sad sterile life, sitting alone in his apartment telling himself what a good person he is. When I was really sick, I called him on the phone one night and he brought me to the hospital.